> I assume that all connections use 3.3V signal levels. Should I ever come across 5V signals, I would probably use a larger Julet M8 for differentiation. OpenWrt writes that some routers already ship with incompatible 1.8V or 2.5V logic. Should the time arrive that I need to work with those, I would probably use this little fella called Micro Q ....
At that point please, please, please just switch to the 4-wire configuration exposing V_IO (aka V_target aka ...). So many problems go away when you have that available. It's nice to have at 3.3V as well, but a lot of OTS 3.3V adapters aren't configured to make use of it.
I would tell anyone who is doing a new traditional serial connector/cable to add the following -
1. Automatic DCE-DTE detection and an interface which will rewire itself as needed to be the correct way, or you automatically know DCE vs DTE by connector gender.
2. Automatic Voltage Detection - 232 levels, TTL 5v, TTL 3v - and interfaces that are isolated enough to deal with the wrong voltage (clamping diodes or whatever), or different cable sizes for each.
3. Automatic type detection - TTL/RS-232, RS-422, RS-485, or different connector types by each.
Ideally I'd do this on a 8p8c or 10p10c connector, because of ease of making cables, with various resistance values across pins 1-8, or 1-10 to tell you what kind of interface it was.
I mostly just go with 3.5mm audio jacks; FTDI makes a prebuilt cable: https://ftdichip.com/products/ttl-232r-5v-aj/
Nice but it’s huge! I’d prefer something smaller like these 3 pin magnetic connectors from Aliexpress. https://a.aliexpress.com/_c4CtK0gj
I always wonder why Molex makes only black and white connectors. This makes it needlessly difficult to use different connectors for different purposes. Same with phoenix contact but there it's mostly green terminal blocks. Is it so difficult to just offer some more colors?
Ideally you wouldn't need to expose a TTL serial debug port to begin with. Maybe on a prototype you would want this but I'd rather just have a single connector that can expose everything (jtag or swd). Bonus points if the interface chip is on the board so it's just a USB port
The only things with a chance at succeeding in this space are putting USB-serial directly on the board + USB-C, or alternatively bluetooth classic RFCOMM profile. (The latter is a very long shot.)
Apart from that, this doesn't even touch upon the various voltage levels for logic-level serial ports, or the question of whether to Vref or not to Vref. (Or RTS/CTS.)
I cannot count how many PCBs I did with various quick connect ideas to have a fast way to debug..
- Chop a PCI connector and have edge fingers on the PCB
- Skedd connectors
- Micro usb with a toggle switch or solder blob to switch between SWD/UART or USB
- Low profile usb-c and have D+/- as normal, and RX/TX over the accessory pins (like audio)
- Pogo pin clips
- GH1.25 connectors
- Tag-connect meh
- If thickness of pcb allows, your PCB can plug directly into a USB-A port (Thicc pcb) or if its too thin, it can plug into a male usb-c connector from a charger cable(might bend some pins though)
etc. etc.
So just like the author, anything but Dupont connectors ;)
I found Julet connectors incredibly hard to disconnect once plugged in. I can’t get a good grip on anything.
FTDI (the company practically synonymous with TTL serial adapters) uses 3.5mm tip-ring-sleeve connectors for this. In other words, a common headphone jack.
I added one to my single-board computer enclosure, following FTDI's wiring. Now I can easily connect whenever I need to use the serial console, and a standard 3.5mm audio extension cable will let me reach across the room without moving my main computer. Replacement parts, if I ever need them, are cheap and easy to find.
Here's the pinout:
https://www.ftdichip.com/Support/Documents/DataSheets/Cables...